A Chindogu Social Yardstick

A Chindogu Social Yardstick

The Social Yardstick [folded] MakeZine prizes on display at Barcamp ManchesterLast weekend was Barcamp Manchester in Manchester, New Hampshire, which had a pretty good turnout of around 50 people. This year there was a new event, The Make Room, made possible by the donation of several awesome Make Magazine Boxed Set collections by O’Reilly Books. The various books were handed out throughout the day to the people who obviously needed them, and the Box Sets were reserved as prizes for the Make Room contests.

Makezine Box Sets used to Failure TestingI first entered the Popsicle Stick Bridge Building Competition, but alas: my clever design relied on craftsmanship to implement correctly. I ended up pulling out of the contest, but this left me with leftover parts for the Chindogu Competition.

Chindogu is the Japanese art of inventing items that solve a problem which are burdened with unfortunate and/or embarrassing side effects that, for all practical purposes, render the invention useless. I seem to enjoy making things in this vein: the Procrastinator’s Clock and the Gauntlet of Productivity are two such items that I’ve posted about in the past. Apparently the muse is still with me; I’m very pleased to present the prize-winning chindogu of Barcamp Manchester 2007, an invention I call The Social Yardstick.

INTRODUCING THE SOCIAL YARDSTICK

The Social Yardstick allows you to always maintain an appropriate distance from the people you care about.

Physically, The Yardstick is a measuring device that collapses to fit in your pocket. The prototype here is constructed out of popsicle sticks and packing tape. Each popsicle stick is labeled a listed below:

  • Acquaintance — This is someone you know only slightly.
  • Co-Worker — Someone you work with regularly, but probably not daily. Casual friends too.
  • Co-Conspirator — Someone you are working with, perhaps sharing a hidden agenda or personal goal. You’re close, but not too close.
  • Best Friend — Someone you’re pretty close with. They’re inside your personal space.
  • Close Family — That is, family members that you actually like.
  • Sweetie — You’ve slept together. Or really want to.
  • You — This is the end of The Yardstick you hold.

The idea for The Social Yardstick was trigged by something that Lokesh Dhakar said at the table I was working at. I was stretching my popsicle sticks (leftover from my failed bridge) in an accordion-like fashion, and he said something about measuring space. I then thought of a time when some friends of mine were having a secret office romance; I’d observed them talking one day standing way too close together to be casual co-workers. I mentioned this to my friend later in case they didn’t want to blow their cover. If they had some way of measuring that space between themselves, they could have maintained discretion with ease! And thus, the Social Yardstick idea was born.

The basic principle: your physical distance from someone often telegraphs how “close” you are. Here’s a diagram to help illustrate the point:

Social Distances In case you’re wondering: the distances in the diagram are roughly based on what “felt right”, though I can see now that it seems roughly based on the width of a person’s body.

USING THE YARDSTICK

To use The Social Yardstick, merely unfold its length and stretch between yourself and the person you are standing near. Read the label on the segment that is closest to the other person, and adjust your distance appropriately. Here are some other example uses:

  • If you are talking to someone you consider an acquaintance and he/she is standing too close, deploy The Yardstick and make sure that your allocation of personal space is not violated.
  • Conversely, if you’re hanging out with your sweetie, use The Yardstick to close the gap: nothing quite says “I Love You” than ensuring you’re both inside each other’s personal space, short of…well, you get the idea.

You can also use The Social Yardstick as a relationship discovery tool. Say you are in a situation where you are trying to figure out the relationships between two people so you’ll have something to talk about at the water cooler. While both parties are standing in place, have the first person hold the stick close to their body and stretch it toward the second person. The label on the stick segment closest to the second person will reveal their actual relationship! You may be surprised by what you find! Just remember: as with the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle in quantum physics, the act of directly observing your subjects will alter the measurement (e.g. people cough, avert eye contact, and move apart). You may need to apply indirect means of observation over several sessions to arrive at a conclusive reading.

Deployment Guide The pre-calibrated distances on The Social Yardstick are based on Urban New England Standards of Personal Space, which is what I’m most familiar with. You may find that you need to adjust for the differing expectations of your locale and culture. For example, people who live in sparsely-populated rural areas probably need a longer yardstick. Likewise, people who work in loud office environments may have to stand closer to just hear each other. And all bets are off when you’re in an elevator or picking a urinal in the Men’s Restroom.

If you have built your own Social Yardstick or have made something similar in the past, let us know in the comments below! Support Social Unity through Appropriate Personal Spacing!

:-)

9 Comments

  1. Britt 17 years ago

    I love it! I wish I could give one to certain people who don’t understand the concept of invading my private space.

  2. Ian Muir 17 years ago

    Congrats on winning. This was a great idea. Unfortunately, my edible pointing device didn’t survive the trip home so my entry is lost forever.

    I think that this will need to be repeated next year. You may have some pretty stiff competition next time.

  3. Dave Seah 17 years ago

    Britt: Thanks!

    Ian: Yeah, I was pretty lucky :-) I think Lokesh’s blind person wall detector was pretty interesting too (and the applause-o-meter was pretty damn close), though it hurt my face to watch it in action :-)

  4. Justin Russell 17 years ago

    Leave it to me to cite research (and Wikipedia at the same time).

    The psychology/anthropology spin on the whole personal space thing is called proxemics (a field pioneered by anthropologist Edward Hall in the 60s) and the Social Yardstick is a brilliant innovation to help test it.

    More about proxemics here for those who are interested:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proxemics

    I’m still debating whether the Yardstick was useless enough to even be considered a chindogo, but I guess it’ll do.  Great seeing you again at BCM, Dave.

  5. Corrie 17 years ago

    Ha ha ha! I LOVE your deployment diagram and the note about distance exaggeration. Congratulations! I think you’ve found a new calling in creating chindogu.

  6. Matthew Oliphant 17 years ago

    I need 100 Gross.  When can you deliver?

  7. Fred 17 years ago

    But Dave,, how do we measure this with close talkers? Are they unmeasurable?
    Hah!  Great post as always, insightful and fun.

  8. Jeff L 17 years ago

    Dave,

    the illustrations here are fantastic.  Congrats on winning, though I agree, I think Lokesh’s entry was awfully close.  Yours might have a bit too much real world use….

  9. Eric 17 years ago

    Reminds me of the ‘Close Talker’ episode of Seinfeld.
    http://youtube.com/watch?v=eBO3I97SzJU